$309.30/day. Time & half on Sat and double time on Sundays.
$592.20 /day for the shoot plus residuals. http://www.sag.org/files/sag/Rate_Sheet_Commercials_8_10_0.pdf
Extra money you pay back for the priveledge of borrowing it.
The time it takes to pay off your loan with extra payments depends on the amount of the extra payments and the interest rate of the loan. Generally, making extra payments can help you pay off your loan faster and save money on interest.
You have to pay an extra fifteen dollars
A tennis player pay is determined by the amount of money sponsors are giving them and the amount of money they receive from winning a tournament. There are extra things to like commercial, guest appearances.
An interest rate as a percentage is the one flat rate you must pay. Interest rate per annum is a compound interest, determined every year that the loan (or whatever) has not been paid back. Say, if you owed me $100 with a 1% per annum interest rate. You have to pay me back $101. If you have not repaid the loan, the next year you would have to pay me an extra 1% of $101, and so on.
If your PDA has built in WIFi,and you are in a hotspot,you will not have to pay extra.
Most places do pay time and a half, some have a set amount of extra pay for holidays, while others pay at the same rate. There is no legal obligation for a private company to pay any kind of holiday pay, just a moral and social obligation.
Answer: Either of the following methods: 1. ((New pay rate / old pay rate) - 1) * 100 2. ((New pay rate - old pay rate) / old pay rate ) * 100 Proof: If old pay rate = 15 $/hr and new pay rate = 18 $/hr, then: 1. ((18 / 15) - 1) * 100 = 20% 2. ((18 - 15) / 15) * 100 = 20% Check: old pay rate * (decimal version of 20%=0.20) + old pay rate = new pay rate 15 * 0.20 + 15 = 18
i personally would not. if you do the extra hours you should get the extra pay.
No, you don't have to pay extra. But if you do you'll get new classes that's it.
If you pay your home off faster than the note, you will pay less interest. The interest will accumulate at the same rate (your rate was set when you signed your note), but you will pay less money towards interest in the end. If you pay your house off in 15 years rather than 30, you will save 15 years worth of interest.